Felipe Massa takes action against F1, FIA, Bernie Ecclestone over 2008 Singapore Grand Prix ‘crashgate’

Felipe Massa wants the FIA to acknowledge it breached its own regulations by not immediately investigating a Singapore Grand Prix crash. PHOTO: REUTERS

LONDON – Former Ferrari driver Felipe Massa has taken action in the London High Court against Formula One, former F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone and the governing International Automobile Federation (FIA), seeking recognition as 2008 world champion and financial compensation.

A court document provided by Massa’s representatives said the best estimate of his alleged financial losses from missing out on the title by a single point – due to the “crashgate” scandal at the Singapore Grand Prix that year – was £64 million (S$108.9 million) plus interest.

That sum represented the difference in salary for the remainder of his career and money from sponsorship and commercial opportunities, as well as a £1.7 million bonus he would have received from Ferrari.

“I always said that I would fight until the end. We will seek the correction of this historical injustice through the courts. The matter is now with the lawyers and they are fully authorised to do whatever is necessary so that justice is done for the sport,” Massa said.

Formula One Management and the Paris-based FIA would not comment on the move when contacted by Reuters.

The 2008 title went to Britain’s Lewis Hamilton, who was then racing for McLaren and is now a seven-time champion competing for Mercedes.

Massa, 42, wants the FIA to acknowledge it breached its own regulations by not immediately investigating a Singapore Grand Prix crash that blew up into one of the sport’s biggest scandals.

The Brazilian was leading the 2008 Marina Bay race from pole position when compatriot Nelson Piquet Jr crashed into the wall on the 14th of 61 laps.

The crash triggered the safety car and benefitted Piquet’s Renault teammate Fernando Alonso, who won the inaugural night race. Massa failed to score after a bungled pit stop. Piquet revealed in 2009 that he had been told to crash by team bosses, who were subsequently banned.

Hamilton won the 2008 title from Massa after overtaking Toyota’s Timo Glock for fifth place on the last lap of the season’s final race, won by Massa, in Brazil.

Massa did not win again after 2008. He suffered a near-fatal head injury at the 2009 Hungarian Grand Prix and retired from the sport in 2017.

In his case, Massa highlighted an Ecclestone quote to the German website F1 Insider stating that Massa should have been world champion in 2008 and was “deprived of the title he deserved”.

The Briton, now 93, also said there was not “enough information at that time to investigate the matter” and cancel the Singapore race. But Ecclestone told Reuters in August 2023 he could not remember saying the quotes attributed to him.

“Attempts to resolve the matter amicably have not been successful so far, leaving, therefore, no alternative but to take the issue to court,” Brazilian law firm Vieira Rezende Advogados said in a statement.

“Recent events highlight the continued relevance of issues of transparency and integrity in Formula One, and it is clear that serious work is needed to restore its credibility and secure its long-term future.” REUTERS, AFP

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